mirror of
https://github.com/elastic/kibana.git
synced 2025-06-28 11:05:39 -04:00
Migrate docs from AsciiDoc to Markdown. The preview can be built after #212557 is merged. @florent-leborgne please tag reviewers, add the appropriate label(s), and take this out of draft when you're ready. Note: More files are deleted than added here because the content from some files was moved to [elastic/docs-content](https://github.com/elastic/docs-content). **What has moved to [elastic/docs-content](https://github.com/elastic/docs-content)?** Public-facing narrative and conceptual docs have moved. Most can now be found under the following directories in the new docs: - explore-analyze: Discover, Dashboards, Visualizations, Reporting, Alerting, dev tools... - deploy-manage: Stack management (Spaces, user management, remote clusters...) - troubleshooting: .... troubleshooting pages **What is staying in the Kibana repo?** - Reference content (= anything that is or could be auto-generated): Settings, syntax references - Release notes - Developer guide --------- Co-authored-by: Florent Le Borgne <florent.leborgne@elastic.co>
2.5 KiB
2.5 KiB
Logging service [logging-service]
Allows a plugin to provide status and diagnostic information.
::::{note} The Logging service is only available server side. ::::
import type { PluginInitializerContext, CoreSetup, Plugin, Logger } from '@kbn/core/server';
export class MyPlugin implements Plugin {
private readonly logger: Logger;
constructor(initializerContext: PluginInitializerContext) {
this.logger = initializerContext.logger.get();
}
public setup(core: CoreSetup) {
try {
this.logger.debug('doing something...');
// …
} catch (e) {
this.logger.error('failed doing something...');
}
}
}
Usage [_usage_2]
Usage is very straightforward, one should just get a logger for a specific context and use it to log messages with different log level.
const logger = kibana.logger.get('server');
logger.trace('Message with `trace` log level.');
logger.debug('Message with `debug` log level.');
logger.info('Message with `info` log level.');
logger.warn('Message with `warn` log level.');
logger.error('Message with `error` log level.');
logger.fatal('Message with `fatal` log level.');
const loggerWithNestedContext = kibana.logger.get('server', 'http');
loggerWithNestedContext.trace('Message with `trace` log level.');
loggerWithNestedContext.debug('Message with `debug` log level.');
And assuming logger for server
name with console
appender and trace
level was used, console output will look like this:
[2017-07-25T11:54:41.639-07:00][TRACE][server] Message with `trace` log level.
[2017-07-25T11:54:41.639-07:00][DEBUG][server] Message with `debug` log level.
[2017-07-25T11:54:41.639-07:00][INFO ][server] Message with `info` log level.
[2017-07-25T11:54:41.639-07:00][WARN ][server] Message with `warn` log level.
[2017-07-25T11:54:41.639-07:00][ERROR][server] Message with `error` log level.
[2017-07-25T11:54:41.639-07:00][FATAL][server] Message with `fatal` log level.
[2017-07-25T11:54:41.639-07:00][TRACE][server.http] Message with `trace` log level.
[2017-07-25T11:54:41.639-07:00][DEBUG][server.http] Message with `debug` log level.
The log will be less verbose with warn
level for the server
logger:
[2017-07-25T11:54:41.639-07:00][WARN ][server] Message with `warn` log level.
[2017-07-25T11:54:41.639-07:00][ERROR][server] Message with `error` log level.
[2017-07-25T11:54:41.639-07:00][FATAL][server] Message with `fatal` log level.